HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1886-09-08, Page 2zfr
Sht guyon 3kwr 1efor4
rellt111111.0)
Orer7 ViredneRIC107 3X0rnirig
"SYWAN42X.% ci&k\I
AT TOUR OFTTOPI
Albert Street, Clinton, Ont,
01.25 in (atones ; ste if not so paid,
• .
The pritprietereor Tuts aonenlan ..f•Trave,
having pnrchaseil the business and plant
ef THE Restos- Rexene, 'ill,.in--fitture
Valhi's]) the amalgamated pa ocrOti Clinton,
Unita the title ,of "Tun 11111toki Wawa-
tineown,"
Clinton is the most presperous town in
Western Ontatio, is the seat of considerable
manufactering, aod the centile ef tlle finest
•agricultural section in °Merle.
The combined circulation of Tim lefitw-
Racoon exceeds that ef any -paper pub-
lished in the ,Dienty af ninon. it is,
therefore, unsiirressed as an advertising
medium,
inTRates of .advertising, liberal 'mid
furnished on application. .
iteParties making contracts far a
lied time, time, Who discontinue their advertise -
limits before the expiry of the same, will'
be charged full rate.
Advertisetnente, witliont instructions as
to space and time, will he left to the judg-
ment of the compositor in the display, in-
serted until forbidden, measured hy.
scale of sotill'.nonpareil (12 lines to the
• inch), and charged 10 cents a line for first
insertion and a cents a line for each•sub-
sequent insertion. Orders to discontinue
advertisements innst be in .Arritity.r.
tar NotireR set • Eta linApiNG MATTP,R,
• (measured by a scale of solid Nonpariel, 12
linos to the inch) Charged at the rate of
. 10 cents a line for. each insertion. .
-JOB WORK. -
. • We -have one of the best appointed Job
0 flires West of Toronto. Our -faeilitieshi
this department enable us to do all kinds
of work—frern.it riallio„o•iqvil to a insuninoth
poster, in the••beist- styie kneWn to the
craft, and at the lowest possible -rates:
Orders by mail proniptly attended to.
• Addl.° : " .„ •
The. News -Record,•. conton. Ont
• Deeember,•188i, '
•
shoulders, for pire his age it had coold be seen kneeling everywhere
not °banged color. Hitt hands, from in groups offeringlip prayer& TIie
long confinement and"the manner fitigt shock wee followed immediate.
in which hie nails were alloWed to ly by another, thottgh of lees effect
grow, had a aloe° reeemblance to
the talus of a monstrous bird.
Pierce wit4 a grittiest° of HerVard
University who had ranked high in
his 01308# He wa. a SPUR g MAU of
Mttch promise, After graduating,
being obliged to make hie own .Nvity
in the world, be secured a situation
to teach the district achool at Tyngtie
borough. While there he fell deep-
ly in love with a itandeoree young
lady, the acknowledged belle of the
place. • She returned his affection,
and in course of time the couple
were engaged to Ise merried. Pierce
.shortly afterward removed to Phila.
delphia to teach school, with the
in of returning home and
bringing his bride to Philadelphia.
He w is smitten's' !struck down by
sickness, his money dwindled away,,
and he returned to Tyugsborough
only to find that his affianced had
been untrue le him. The shock was
so great that he losthisreeson. His
false love went to New York tie the
wife of a Wall street „broker, while
he dragged out.forty years of miser-
able existence.
_
The Huron IVews-Reoord
Ilrednesdayi•S'eptember 8th
THE CHIEFTAIN HOME
AGAIN. -•
.
but renewing the screatneliU
shrieks, and from the time of be•
ginning to daylight shocks were felt
at intervals of half an hour, but
mob sueceeding one being leo die.
tines Three or four.fires etarted in
as many sectione-With the first shock
and the city Was soon illumined
with flames, tints leading all to be-
lieve that what 'Watt loft by the earth-
quake would be devoured 'by fire.
However, the fire department was mo
well divided and handled that the
fires were gotten under control by
daylight, From fifteen to twenty
resideuces and stores Were consumed.
TIIE OAS IT ALT IEEL
Owing to the demoralized con-
dition of everything here it is im-
passible to give the eorrect facts
further than this :—The number of
casualties has not yet been ascertaiu-
ed, but probably from 30 to 40 were
killed and over 100 injured. The
lose to property will probably reach
$10,000,000. Three,fOurths of the
buildings in the city will have. he bo
re -built.• 00TRER BROCK.
GERMAN :CANADIANS.
. • The Montreal Gazette'speaking of
the German •population of Ontario
says the beginning of the Pres-'
'out century a number of Mennonites
sottled in. Weterloo, an(la few years.
Sh John A.. Macdonald returned.
-.from flritish Columbialast.ThurSday
• greatly benefited in healthappnrent-
ly byliis. trip and rituell!pieasedwith,
the litarty (mai Ontinisiastie . recep-
tions withwhich he. had met "all
.'elongthe line," both going andre-
turninrr. - NO...formal reception oc-
0
curred•afthe station, butabout ntidr:
day it was -decided that il, Weithl bo-
.
latera German company in Pennsyl-
vania bourdit 45,000 acres. in. the.
.0
same township. That they :have
multinlied is evident from the lest
cenens:of the districts. of North and
South Waterloo, which shows' that in
the form er,ont•of it total population of
-20,985, no lees. than 15,557 are Ger-
-Men ;• while:II:Oho latter, 8,811 out
of 21,754, are of the Aaine extraction.
If less.-numeroes in other districts'
'they. are still' considerable, • In
Betides, for instance, there are 6,-
966 of -that nationalityL in Lennox,
4,500; in -Addington., .5;043;'
Hastings, 5,406; 6,26.1 ;*
in Hastings, 5,406 ; in South 'Grey,
-4,700; in • :North Perth; 7,768;. in
South Huron.3,821s, in Essex, 3,476,
tnd eo.on-the Germans thronghout
the greater part.of Ontario constitut:
ing an influential 'element in the
imputation. Taken•altogether there
arena- mere industriotfs, inventive,
enterprising; thrifty. citizens.. '
)ART ILQUAKE, •
a {Wend proper termination' Of hie:
pleasant trip if an addressfrom the
varpons ConSerVatiyn •associatiens in
• Ottawa Were presented to him in
the :Opein Heim: Although the
• notice•waa •YerY short; the building.
:was Crowded to its ',tamest. Opacity
and -hundreds were.unahie,t6 obtain
admission.' Mr. James Stewart,
sitlent qf theWorkingnion's Liberal-
ConservatiVe-Aseociation, presided,
, and on. the platform .'were,SirJohn
Mactlargi14. ,Sir 'Hector ?Isaisgevins
on..John .Hon. J. S. D. •
ThoMpson,•Senetor. (item w„ MeSsrs.
(J 11. Mttekintosli,'111. P., Jas., Tasse;
'M. P., •P, nailterville; P: P.rand
. .
• litany others: 'Afterthe presentation
of the address:ePeeches We.TS •niade
81V Johit, Sir Hector Langevin,lfr.
...1.171romption,and.M.r. Cerling,also by
• - Messrs.. Tasee; Mackintosh, Bas,ker-
• vine and GleMow, and after raising
.cheere•for Sr John and Latly Mac<-
. donald and -the gluten the meeting
ilistmiSed, Sir ;John being • escorted
home by a loge number andi-
.: own in eerrlages preceeded by .the
•St. Anne's bend, .
'
FORTY YEARS
• ORARLESTON,
souro dattorax.A, IN
RUINS.
mansion were wrecked. There were
numerous easels of •nervone pivots.
tion. Two (shooks Were felt this
morning. The trensor of the earth
fnede pedestrians stagger.
MORE tOlOGRes
At Havene,Grn eight shticks or
earthquake were 'felt to -day. At
Summerville,. S. C; ten more sitockS
were &It tornaightssesome quite
severe,
IN CANADA, TOO.
Petrone, Ont.. Sept. 1—A (shock
of earthquake was experieneed here
last night about 8.50 by several of
our prominent citizen '
tidiPPITid 0ttiVAT1o$H,
Washington, Sept 1.— Major
Powelt', Director of the United
States Geological Survey, says the
earthquake was well observed by,W.
J. McGee, of the Geological Survey.
After the culmination of the first
:shock the phenomena were timed,
EAR'VIIQUAREFS OV TIIE VAST,.
, 50 p. m.—AMither
shook -has just passed., over the city,
tether ntore sevord than any eince•
last. night. At 9 55. it •Itnocked
'down several houses.
"
• 'Charleston, S. .0....sopti...1.—At
8,25 o'clock this Mornings another
wave swePt oveL tuo.sity,' coming,
• as the other did, froth the 8out,11-'emit
•and going in .anottlt Oast' direetion2
By thaVtime people 'wile- bed 'been
SEVERAL WELL DEFINED 'SHOCKS
of earthquake occurred at Syrnia he-
tween.eleven and 'twelve o'clock last
night; The jars wereheavy, and
many poonle Warne -lade sick. The
city is :wrapped in gloom, husiness
is entirely suspended. and people
generally , remain in the streetS,. in
tents and under improvised shelters,
end•Will,cantri out to-night,fearing
another shock; The gas ..works are
injuted, andnrobabl y the city will
be without liglit to -night. Mitch
injury was done. to mituaions.. :Many
•houseare so badly craeked that
hard bloW weeld bring Omrn to. the
grotied. ' -The shoak , was severe at.
Sullivan Island; but ..110 loss ef
is .repotted at. Sytnia. There nre
lisseres in the' earth Minced, frorn.
which the sand; apparently .from
great depth otudes sulphurous
- •
•
rssot,y, S, 0,
•
hualsandp a eteady and induitrioue
men, wile able to eupply his Wife
• with all the /leoeselarlesi and many
of the hoagies of There Was
no -apparent reason why they ,should
not have lived (ti happinese tu
gether, Two years ago a daughter
Witti sent to cheer their way and
And about thosame time the husband
became a melitber of the liamilton,
flitrioefstepaguepititve jnertithorezitayu'act ser
It man who is always teady
to do and to. dare anti on more than
One occasion has Won for himself
high prse. On' Saturday night he
was on duty at one of the etatione
when a boy handed Iiiin a note dressed to' to himeelf,, it contained"
few words, but they were enough to
make his head reel. A neighbor
had written to say that if he didn't
know that another person was oc-
cupying his place in his ebsence he
might find that each f3,111ti OaIle: by
going home immedietely. Ile got
fifteen minntes leave of 'absence and
started for home, 115i. Rebecca
street. He found his house locked
up, and was told by somedne who
pcCitpied the window of an aajOill-
ing house that his wife bad. gone
nut. It gashed 'across his mind that
perhaps the note he had got was a
miserable joke, and be was about to
retern to the station when sotheone
from across, the road called to hint
that his wife and het parmour were
inside. He forced in the (loot and
went to his wife"s-room. The.' at:wt.
was locked.' This he forced in,. and
Its it went open, he saw• his Vilfe's
night dress disappeetunder the bed.
dlehind the door was Miehael Shea.,
young,man Hying in the.vicinitY,
.engaged in trying to put himSelf -in-
side n pair of trousers. - The hus-
band is a very cats" heeded man,•but
.he-foond it diffildult to keep himself
from doing Violent things; •He
hustled Shea out end told the woman
to be away -by • moinine.. Next
Int:amine he :took- furnitiire dealer
to hisliouSe, sold everything excePt
elan, at tieles,,which lie put into a
bundle -and took with him and left.
the place.. Having coneidered 'atl
,the circumstances he arrived Atli°
conclusion that the Satinet he got
.rid of the woman the better.11itur
iltan SpedOton ". •
During 1885 there were record-
ed the following earthquakes in •the
Uuitell,States and Canada ;—Cana-
dian Provinces, 8; New England,
5•; -Atlantic States/ 9 ; Mississippi
Valley, 3; Pacific Slope, 34—total,
'59. • .During 12 y.ears, 1872 to 1883,
there have been recorded in the'
United States and Canada 364
eartheinokes. Many otth•ese distur-
bances Were so:.sl•ight as to be un -
•.perceived by a Majority of, people.
The list is more complete in the -
densely. po.pelated arid frequently
shaken Atlantic Slope than either
the seldom shaken 'Mississippi Val-
ley or the spareely. populated Peeing
S lope.' .
the ,shock burst mill:dirms, and some
sthonsatid. feet •of railroad track. was
destroyed, ..The : ,,telegraph wire- supply ,eeeni's ineithauetible. ,Two
*ere •446 destroyed. No tTain'l are, *gigantic rivers have been•formed by
running.: The Westeraljnion Pla- .tilis.phenqmenal iveterburst„ \rid&
graph Co. has stetted ltain" eitirffoin ....,. , .;.
Stimmerville to restore ,eonimuniCa-: , inei. unning il ' .. ril the town: at the
1.T011,, . , .
:Vett. Great &mine is.;Tpi)orted .0 rate, ,ef twelve -rnilea ,an bour, and
Surnmerville,.: The railroad is badlY carrying everything' before them, -
. notssas AND. myns -Arm Vrtrinaresans
broken'. on both sides or IlrancbVille.
STRON-q WATER.
• Ono day last. week, while boring.
for water at Belle.Plain, Iowa, the
artesian Woll,fonr inehes in diameter,.
burst when .a :depth of 130. feet had
'readied, and instantly a. volume
.of water Was' *forced into the .air:
to • the distance of several hundred,
feet.. This gradually increased mi
size and . 4blu me until a stream, or
weter .ftilly sixteen -• inches pi
diameter' was formed, and -the 4-•
ward fen°. of, this stream is equal.
•to the •power of Powder Or dynamite.
The Water, in •huge valuines, -le
epOutinr..high in the sift,- end the
NEWSPAPER LAWS
We call the special attention ofroet •
meters and eabsedbere to the.rollowing
lynopsta or the newspaper lawsi--
rei1tihct to
417-11411AiilYVellij:149ttitITTIVallaSitWei;eWtilstli (41inveli
aot take his paper out of the ofileksilid
gate the r83.4011. tor Its net 1.teing Mom
anyneglect to do enthee the postmaster-
reepousible te the publishere for payment..
14—If any person callers his paper (Ifs.
sontifluett, he must pay all arrearages; Ot
the „nntillsber May erred -nue tb ,sena it
Until payment Is made gird Collect the
whole amount. whether he taken fi•oin
the office or not. There eau lie no legal
diseontinuance until the payment is made,
3—Any person who takes a paper frotti
ths priet-ofilee, whether directed tcr''
name or another, or, whether be has sub. •
•iCribati or not, is responsible for, the PaY.
.4—ff a subscriber orders his peperte be
'stopped at a certain time, end the publish-
er continues to send,. it the subscriber is
henna to pay for it if he takes it out or the
post.elli ca. 'This proceeds upon the groun
that it man mud pay for lvliat he iiiies4
••• TUE 'AVOR§T., EVER EX:PEEIENPED., th is .pe'culiar freak of nature, .and
• Professor' Mendenhall, . •the the citizensareappalled their.hn-
w who has. made it study: pendieg, danger, .NV at least they
of • W01(1 mikes fist • many yeas,. and. itss wolegs .syssessse, .
_has felt the. theck :Of ..nutuber of. :Rig it impossible to divert the Aged;
' severe. ones in Japan, seys nig el:- an attempt was :made to inspitssix.-
teen inch bona' iton tubes into the
Well, but these were instantly' blown
;out and forded high' info ,the
Finding this plan, usoleas the :ter-.
rifted' peeple attenipted to fill tip •
tbt.•aporture throngh which this.
terrible geyser was spouting •its
deluge. Fift.een 'carloeds of stone
were ,.einfitietk into. ' the well; jsnt
"theie were forded upivard though
propelled by . the • fovea of giant
powder. •••Bags n'f.sand We0 then
hastily 'constructed and mit into the
well, but these too were hurled into,
'the The Chicago and North-.
Western -Railway was called -upon
for assistance and instantly sent n
large gang ofttnen to • the rescue.:
The Inr4lgo gang of the comity was
Otto called upon, but up : to tine of
writing rin abatetnept in the flow; of
water wasparceptible,and the rtfeh-.
int. -,...rivers forded bylit were Washing,
the .ahannela they. lied auntie deeper
end Wider, while' the- 'basin -formed
by 'tide '••• , '• .
• IMMENSE VALOR .011 WATER
outin pubtie-parkeand open. places.,,:134 • not oAPPoielly
Severe, was neveithelesS the • worst
lie ever experienced in this country.
lie . expresses -etli•priSe at.the wide
extent of the phenomena, end thinks ,
it likelYthat when the ''reports nye •
allin it will be •found that the area
affected is:larger than that of arty
provioue.eartlicittakon .oe record. •
, count11.141,s. &., • •
all niglit, many ok diem; vstattired.
intotheir liOusea to get •clotbin rr• and
'something to eat. Theapproaat,.,of
the qtfake. was heralded by the usual
rumbling sound resoniblites distant
thunder. ••Then it 7 gradtiZly: rtp-.
preaChed, Bib earth quivered and
heaved, and if three seconds it lied.
• passed.•7the sound dying out iu the'
. is the. • only wave
felt since 2 30 this morning. It was
not Tlestruetire,etll desk:00n haes,
jug been :done by 9 55 Iasi. might..
The city is a oomplete :sereck. St
Miehael's .0"turch and Si Phillip's
Chureh, two, .Of the . most historic
•Oblirolleg in the eqY, arp in ruins ;
so is the' Hibernian Hell,'the police
station and many other:politic:build-
inos- Fully.two•thirthi of the resi,
derides. in.theeity ere uninlutbited^
—wreeked- either totally or partially:.
It is expected . r.
,
'
:BET %VEEN :F PTY. ONE HUNDRED
and to Y eral'hund red.. Wounded. -At
the 61116'0f the 'firetihoek fire broke
out -hi 'different plitees itt the city,
and about twenty houifee were des-
troyed by lire. • •SeArcely one blind --
red lionsps iu the airy ere occupied
44110' tipte, people luntig encamped
in open places. All stores are Clok,
ed, and it is • feared there will Iv a
seareity • of provisions'because
one can' be got to reaeli the stores
.sell them; 'The .raileofut is under
water in some places betweexi. here
and, limieneis, twenty five Atilles
north of the latter place, amt 'the'
earth has caved. in.several. platics. .•
MP) VIREO SITOOK,'
of ,eftilliquake was felt approaching
last night about 0 00, and before
people could,realize what the trouble
was they found themselves being
throWn aroamt and their- ltelistqf
falling down on them. Everyone
ran screaming into the street, awl in
ft few seeomis the city was wild
.I.En•Sotzs fr.st7 it0gx Kti.,t,En;
• • Willtud rieree, who died at.the,
poorhouSe at Tyngsboratigh„.Xass.,.
a small toavn •a few • Miles • from.
Lowell, Wu's it B1311 With • a .straiAge
end romantic history. At.the time
-uf Itis death be was 03. years' or ttge.
and had beeu. hi sditaay. eOnfine.:.
Metit for iiptyard of 40 years, The
eell Whiell he had. spent almost
his entire. life WO but eight feet'
Sqrlare.. Ile Was violently insane,
• and for years. his food • had been
• • padfidil in to him .throtigh a grating,
'8,phioni daring all those weary yeark
was he ()ter satin in any other post-.
lion than .sittiog un' a low stool in
one earner of (101.1 With his. head
b.e.ritut in his Iphas. dietutbed
• be Weititi greirl awl snap at, the in--
,trniler m1011110 $401110 453 ilog might
do, His hair had grown to au ex?
tratirdinary tength., It hung •In
Matted. bleak 'aka far doWii di him
et 9 48 last itirrlit Wes •-visited by a:
•
terrible earthquake. People malted
Madly from: their hoeses-into the
streets. , -Signs sprang from WEIldOiVS -
and' were • injured. Five min:etas
• after' the fit:M.4100c a' second •came,
and ten Minutes later a third, Other.
shocks -•followed uktil• 1.05 a.' m,,
when the eighth shack NrasTelt, .and
:this one. lasted for a mining. and it
half. At four o'clock this 11101
the ninth shock chino, and at 9 30
a;. 'M. end 10 20 it In, the city was
agaiti..InaTa.elcl....trentbje.t • .
• AliOnnTA) OA.,
.two d•ietinet •sliocke of earthquake
. were felt, this ntorning 50 end
7 20,"city time. -:Antinther of houses
Imre been rintorted to the fire Wa11,,
delta a$411 dangcr,,and from alt.p.arie
of the city and surrienitlitig neigh-
borhood omits reports of small dein
-
age • by shooks, stiCh ai railing of
eltituneye; parting of walls„ timaelt-
ing•of crockery, etc. In a 'railway
-accident at: 'Bengt ey it fireman. WaS
killed, Another Fiotith • Catolina
railroad. traik was ditched at florae
Creek, four miles front the city, and
, killed. . The eartliqllidt0
Ing night was felt aS far south as
• liarton,
sIxTrIms EISTINCT
. Cnimuliia, 8. 0, there were,
sixteen • distinct shocks from the
earthrptake niglit. and up to five
o'clock this morning. The first
shoelt wag fearful, and bongos were
shaken as though Made of PaQta'''
board. It seemed as it eVerything
(nest topple, The ritniblieg in the
TO IIIS..ONE FAULT A LITTLE-
. -KIND. . .
•
young. widow in Waukesha,
whose husband had been dead fors
,
month., and whom she had alvSnya
supposed to be freefrOM small vicee,
was nverhauling his. :clothes • the
other des,: She foiled n.large plug
of tobecco in his 'coat -pocket: •
George t • Geotge I" she ism:Wino:1
-despaningfy, "you end I will never •
Meet ia the :good World I" La au-
otber :pocket of the same, garment
she. found a life,insnraneepo'lley far
$5,000; of -:Ivirltielt •she•'had before.
'known -nothing, and she laird forth
exultantly : "Oh, yei we will ! :we
will .henivon forgive' him hie
titult
, ' ' - • • .
one
. .
0• •0 • 0. t4
n'qr'T the. Division Comes in (Induce])
at the „November sittilig newspiper pub-
lisher sneil for pay of paper. The defend-
ant objeeted paying on the gromid that lie
had ordered a former propril‘for or the
paper to Oiseonrilme it. The Judge +Ail
that that was BO a valid tiereeee., The
plaintel;• the present proprietor, had no
netiee ,to •discontinue :md eonsequently.
could .celleet, although it was not denied .
that defendant hail notified •forther pro-.
printer to discontieue. - In any _event
defendant was bonna-to-pay for the tithe
ho lOuVreeeiveil tlie untilfhe
, had paid all Orval-n:4'1e for subscription.
' Unfinished. . Wedding, -
Why. clid Lord Verriner wander
in .s.Vrangesand tropical climate, ex -
pima Jayen .and,Tinibuctool and at- • •
tempt to °roe§ the Hinitilayes-1.' Tlio
'noble earl .0tily taied to get ma•rried • •
'once, and in the story of that wed-.
ding isgOntained ,the remelt .for his
becoming : such it • • diStingnished..•
traveller' and growing such long
beard.. '
• -Lord Verriner had been 'going the
pace ever -since be cattle in -to the•
• title.and get bold of., his property' ;
and at the time of which.I am speak- •
ing, thongh: Alm former neCessivrily
reineined ..intaat, the • latter . wits 1...
praatiCally ."non-existent. • Ile. had
borrowed from • his bootmaker, his
, and his.jewelers; after linyifig.
prey lonely exhansted the Patienee
and generosity of the jesve„ Gatub-..
ling, Inc' ing and N'women' bail, 111.1:heti
ruined him.' .Bet still his title and.
position •had:a. marketable' valne
for his was on of 'the Inoiit
distut-
•guiahod .farrillies iu• Eogland.
:jews and • .bootmakfirs would no,
with human beings perfectly craSed oath wsslond and horritying in the
‘vith fright. Exclamations eould be extreme. Clocks slopped, lions wefel
heard onall' aldee• such 'rung,and great damage dune to build.
God save, us Is' "God hmia..nt,erey.1 hy topPling chint4
upou ifinittits f' And peovla •uoyd, Iwo rooms the 00Vnalet
• W/t0, Eli ng over the lowlends in
tile .Th.e 'Mayor ofIbolIa
Pliln,- 111 his 'last exEreinity, tole
oraphod to Chicago . for the hest
o
engineers that conld. be 'secured to
*mime. immedietely to the spot and
Use their Skill and energy in..at-
tempting • to glop this perilons con-
dition of affairs. The city engineer,
to whom Alio matter referred,
,intinced :Engineer Ntorgan to under -
mite the mission. Engineers are of
the opinion thet little can ler dune
to Atop the' flow of watsir, hut think
:it may be possible to. direct the
riVers into a less dengerous 'direc-
tion, and e,outine them to their
°haunts's,
•
A'N WIVE.
•
Three yowl% ago or ttifle MOO
N.Ottle It011aN., rather °Weeny°
looking 'girl, daug,liter of a Beams -
vine farmer, wee Wooed enliven by
1)4014 Low 1,3 goAp I. a pendent and 'lively Manner which
this city, They Were married Ann
'
. . ' • • •
• T:17, DIAIFSSION OF
• .• .'1IE4'VE;IST; • .
. .
...A. :papilla periodicai. publishee
the fano:wing, interesting paragraph:
the idea being to endeavor to 'sinew
in some. way the ahnensions of Lea -
von... Any one nutY prove the ap-
proximete acceiney of the computa-
tion for himself by performing,the
severat 'operations called' for. •The
besie of the, calculation is taken' from
the sikteenth verse of 'the twenty-
'fitst.ehapter of Revelations;
-"And he Measured the. city with.
a rCed,'12,000 furlong -S.. The 'length
and the breadth and the' height Of
it are eqtuil,"
• .
longer trnSt even .thongh he• .
was the handsomest of his day,
with the Most perfect manners, end
one -Of the pate, 'of that' Fimalt Circle
of .societys which sits np. aloft like a.
.party- of clieritbs,.regardinc.; eCorn,
fully themorals'and manners of the
respectable people •in
spite of the loSt credit- of Lord.Ver-
Tiller among the money lendere; he
wee still a ,spoiled darling ainong 7
the wornen. Aud it occurred to
him one , (ley 'that *here Was his •
market. He must do, the meat'.
thing : Marry moneyi,whiCh. wanted' ,
a title in exchange,. .
.Thinkiug the. thing over, be -sew
that .moet of . his fellows. wha had
• stieceeded-in fretting out of a similar
predidament t'by these moans, had
married'. AineriCan girls.... This; he
thought, would be a reierab'y easy, •
thing: to do. English wallet ap-
peared 'to hi in •to recoil -re- too much..
attention, end. to be less business-
like and MOTO sentiment:a 'in tlieie.„k' • :
.matriinonial affairs. • He decided Io
looknnt for All A.merican..
er• believed :he understood women*,
thoroughly.. Ho, •was, (in excelleet
actor, and could Clank himself With
a profoundly bored air which was a
great'stieeess among the Women of
his own- social status. 'He preserved '
this air alwrLys when in Society, for,
"4'88 'he well know, it Was sere, •It
prevented his ever getting tato hot
water. ,Untierneath this quite sm.,
face a volcano blazed, and a very
unpleasant valealo, too. Verriner
bad the -most frigliattl tem perswhich
IV) Was ileelVitethed tO let 100$10 111)011
hie hely friends, his servants, his
horses and dogs. ,The two first left
him, and the two lest showedtheir
resentment in different ways. ' Ile
wee stover wife from a bite in Ins-
owi 4tble, and his dogs kept out ur • .
his sight.
Their° thousand •fitriortga. °natal
7,920,000' tad, . which, being oubed,
406,793,088,000,000,000,000 etthig
feet.. 11,..seriing one-half. • of thli
snap() for the .throne and. eotti.t .of
bliavor,,,'..and half the htleaeu
streeta, .. we • have the' •emainder,-
.124,198,272,000,000,000,000 cubic
feet. Divide •this • by 4006, the
cubic feet in a room 16 feet Fever°,
and there will he .30,311,8-13,750,-
009,000, rooms. •Now, seppeso .the
World • always did ,Atid always , will-
• hold 990,000;00 inhabitants -end
that a generation lasts thirty-three
and one-third years, making in all
2,070,060,000,000 inhabitants every
century, and Old the wed,' will
stend • 100,000,000 years or 1000
centetiee, making, in all '2,070,000,-
000,000 inhabitants. Then seppose
• therii were 100 worlds egnat to this
in the number of the inhabitants and
This >vas the Man, .W110, a month?'
or • two after he btu' nettle. up hia
11)11) i to do it, had discovered a new
Amerieen beatitYoittet over from the
duration of years, initlting• tn,tal Qt.
States for the London season, with
2,970,000,000,000,000 pereone, and
dollars an(1 greenbaeks, enceigh to
•thein would be more thena hundred
reinstate Any rtnned lord. VAihiner
roainsseixteen• feet wet° to each
thought her really vet's. •tolerable,
peroott. and..Was„ itch al.:nisei'. at her indes
it very respeetable young moo or •
t it ti their aboda Itoro;' the1. ulphot 131%1;9' i.io:1(‘'cloYsviotthitxotikitkett 110%,
koe vir,,uen 0, a 5 ' r
rhea• p and handy rortil or obtain' eontrestefl sl • the p'rofounil